Herwaldt B L, de Arroyave K R, Wahlquist S P, de Merida A M, Lopez A S, Juranek D D
Division of Parasitic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30341-3724, USA.
J Clin Microbiol. 2001 Jan;39(1):34-42. doi: 10.1128/JCM.39.1.34-42.2001.
We conducted a prospective, longitudinal study in a cohort of 36 Peace Corps volunteers (PCVs) in Guatemala to study the incidence and natural history of intestinal parasitic infections during the PCVs' >2-year overseas stay. PCVs collected stool specimens at least monthly and when ill with gastrointestinal symptoms. Of the 1,168 specimens tested, 453 (38.8%) were positive for at least one parasite and 48 (4.1%) were positive for a pathogenic parasite. A median interval of 187 days (range, 14 to 752 days) elapsed before the first documented parasitic infection, and the median intervals from arrival until subsequent infections (e.g., second or third) were >300 days. The PCVs had 116 episodes of infection with 11 parasites, including up to 4 episodes per PCV with specific nonpathogens and Blastocystis hominis. The incidence, in episodes per 100 person-years, was highest for B. hominis (65), followed by Entamoeba coli (31), Cryptosporidium parvum (17), and Entamoeba hartmanni (17). The PCVs' B. hominis episodes lasted 6,809 person-days (28.7% of the 23,689 person-days in the study), the E. coli episodes lasted 2,055 person-days (8.7%), and each of the other types of episodes lasted <2% of the person-days in the study. Gastrointestinal symptoms were somewhat more common and more persistent, but not significantly so, in association with pathogen episodes than with B. hominis and nonpathogen episodes. Although infections with pathogenic parasites could account for only a minority of the PCVs' diarrheal episodes, the continued acquisition of parasitic infections throughout the PCVs' >2-year stay in Guatemala suggests that PCVs repeatedly had fecal exposures and thus were at risk for infections with both parasitic and nonparasitic pathogens throughout their overseas service.
我们对危地马拉的36名和平队志愿者(PCV)进行了一项前瞻性纵向研究,以了解PCV在海外超过2年的停留期间肠道寄生虫感染的发生率和自然病程。PCV至少每月收集一次粪便样本,出现胃肠道症状时也会收集。在检测的1168份样本中,453份(38.8%)至少有一种寄生虫呈阳性,48份(4.1%)致病性寄生虫呈阳性。首次记录到寄生虫感染前的中位间隔时间为187天(范围为14至752天),从抵达至后续感染(如第二次或第三次)的中位间隔时间超过300天。PCV发生了116次感染,涉及11种寄生虫,每位PCV感染特定非致病性寄生虫和人芽囊原虫的次数最多可达4次。每100人年的感染发生率,人芽囊原虫最高(65次),其次是结肠内阿米巴(31次)、微小隐孢子虫(17次)和哈氏内阿米巴(17次)。PCV的人芽囊原虫感染持续了6809人日(占研究中23689人日的28.7%),结肠内阿米巴感染持续了2055人日(8.7%),其他类型的感染每次持续时间均不到研究中人日的2%。与致病性寄生虫感染发作相比,胃肠道症状在人芽囊原虫和非致病性寄生虫感染发作时更为常见且持续时间更长,但差异不显著。虽然致病性寄生虫感染仅占PCV腹泻发作的一小部分,但在PCV在危地马拉超过2年的停留期间持续发生寄生虫感染表明,PCV反复接触粪便,因此在整个海外服务期间有感染寄生虫和非寄生虫病原体的风险。